koster /classics/ en Congratulations to Isabel Koster! /classics/2020/08/26/congratulations-isabel-koster Congratulations to Isabel Koster! Anonymous (not verified) Wed, 08/26/2020 - 08:11 Categories: 2020 News and Events Tags: faculty recognition koster spotlight

The Department of Classics congratulates Isabel Köster on her successful comprehensive review and reappointment!

Isabel Köster (Ph.D. Harvard 2011) studies the history and literature of the Roman Republic and early Empire with a special interest in matters of religion. Her publications include articles and chapters on divine punishment, various aspects of Ciceronian invective, and, most recently, the emperor Caligula’s flamingo sacrifices. She is currently completing her first book, Roman Temple Robbery: The Literary Construction of a Heinous Crime.

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McClanahan Lecture: Roman Temple Robber /classics/2018/09/19/mcclanahan-lecture-roman-temple-robber McClanahan Lecture: Roman Temple Robber Anonymous (not verified) Wed, 09/19/2018 - 00:00 Categories: 2018 News and Events Tags: events koster lectures mcclanahan

How to make a Roman temple robber:
rhetoric and abuse from Ciceronian Rome to Lord Elgin

presented by Professor Isabel Köster

Wednesday, September 19, 2018
7:00 PM in HUMN 250

Stealing from a sanctuary was one of the worst crimes a Roman could commit. A temple robber was a creature of insatiable greed who risked angering the gods to satisfy his desires. Our image of what Roman temple robbers were like, why they were a problem, and how they should be punished comes primarily from literary accounts. This talk explores three Roman temple robbers: a general who plundered too much during a campaign, a corrupt and vicious governor, and an emperor who takes on Jupiter. I also consider echoes of Roman discourses about temple robbery in George Byron’s “The Curse of Minerva,” a poem that casts Elgin’s plundering of the Athenian Acropolis in the early 19th century as an act that needs to be avenged by the gods.

Free and open to the public - no registration required.

Sponsored by Mary E.V. McClanahan and the Department of Classics.
This event will take place at 1610 Pleasant St. Eaton Humanities.  Parking available just north of the Eaton Humanities building.
Contact www.colorado.edu/classics or 303-492-6257 for more information.
 

Download the Full Event Poster.

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